Kate Daniels 06 - Gunmetal Magic
Ivar brought a pitcher of tea and some glasses.
“Why make a necklace that would strangle a child?” Curran asked.
“It’s a long story.” Ivar sighed. “I take it you know what I am?”
“A dvergr,” I said.
“That’s right.” Ivar looked at his hands. They were large, out of proportion to his body. “I work with metal. As long as I can remember, the metal spoke to me. Some things I make are harmless. Plows, horseshoes, nails. Some are not. I have made a blade or two in my time. The thing is, once the blade is out of your hands, you can’t control what it’s used for. I try.”
“Like with Dagfinn?” I guessed.
Ivar nodded. “How is that boy doing?”
“Well,” Curran said.
“Good to hear. He had a bit of a temper, that one.” Ivar looked out at the river’s shore where Roderick and Ruckus chased each other. “Trisha is my second wife. My first one, Lisa, well, she was…The best I can figure, she was elfin. No way to know for sure, of course. She showed up on my doorstep one day and stayed. She was beautiful. We had a daughter, but the valley life wasn’t for Lisa, so one morning I woke up and she was gone. Left the baby with me. I did my best to raise her. She had hair like gold, my Aurellia. But I must have done a lousy job raising her. There was never any warmth in her, no empathy. I don’t know why. She was fully grown when a young man came down to the valley. He said he wanted to apprentice himself to me. To learn about smithing. I don’t take apprentices, but the boy had talent, so he and I made a bargain. He would stay with me for a decade.”
“Ten years is a long time,” I said.
“It’s enough to learn how not to do harm,” Doolittle said.
Ivar threw him a grateful look. “You understand. You can’t teach the craft in ten years. I’m past eighty and I still learn new things every day. But I thought a decade would be long enough to teach him what you should make and what you shouldn’t and when. Can’t just hand that kind of power to a man and let him loose in the world without guidance. So Colin and I made a bargain. He would wear the collar and stay here in the valley to learn all I could teach him. If he left the boundary of the valley before the time was up, the collar would kill him. He understood that there was no turning back. Once he put on the collar, he had to stay here for ten years.”
“Aurellia decided to leave?” Curran asked.
Ivar nodded. “She had no skills. There’s a school down in Cashiers, and I tried to take her there, but she quit. Didn’t care for it. Didn’t care for the metalwork either. Thought it coarse and common. It’s my own fault: I had explained money to her and that in the outside world you can’t just live off the land and barter the way we do here. So she decided Colin would take care of her. One day I went up in the mountains to the old Cooper mine, and when I came down, they were gone. I had warned Colin that even if he managed to take the collar off, it would try to find him again and he wouldn’t be able to resist. The way I figure, Aurellia got it off him somehow and they must’ve sold it. There was a lot of gold in that collar.”
Now things made sense. Colin made the money. She needed him alive to take care of her. Roderick was just incidental.
“Colin doesn’t do metal smithing anymore,” I told him. “He’s an accountant. I don’t think he even remembers his time here. They way he acted when he saw the collar, I don’t think he knew what it was. He and Aurellia had a daughter. The necklace killed her. That’s their son.” I pointed down toward the valley where the boy and dog played. “Aurellia put the necklace on him to keep it off Colin.”
Ivar’s face jerked. “The necklace was never meant to follow the blood. It was only meant to keep Colin here.”
Roderick came up the stairs. His face was flushed. “We don’t have to go yet, do we?”
I would not take him back to that bitch.
Ivar looked at his grandson. There was a sadness there andregret. A lot of regret. I could see the resemblance between them now: same dark hair, same serious, somber look in the eyes.
“Do you like it here?” Doolittle asked.
Roderick nodded.
The medmage looked at the dwarf. “Second chances don’t come about often.”
Ivar’s face went slack.
“He’s right,” Curran said.
Ivar took a deep breath and smiled at Roderick. “Roderick, I’m your grandfather. Would you like to stay here for a
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